Did Archaeology Confirm Luke-Acts? The House of Annas, James, and the Early Church
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What does a first-century ossuary reveal about Jesus, the apostles, James, and the political world of the early church?
In this episode of Modern Mind, Ancient Book, we explore the ossuary of Yehoḥanah—granddaughter of Theophilus the high priest—and what this remarkable artifact reveals about the priestly dynasty of Annas, Caiaphas, and the Jerusalem power structure surrounding the rise of Christianity.
Using archaeology, Josephus, Luke-Acts, and Second Temple history, we examine:
* The ossuary inscription linked to Theophilus the high priest
* The dynasty of Annas and Caiaphas in the time of Jesus
* How Acts 4 may preserve memory of a real priestly family bloc opposing the apostles
* The political setting behind the persecution of Peter, John, and James
* The burial anomaly of Yehoḥanah and what it may imply about tension within elite priestly circles
* Why this evidence strengthens the Jewish and early historical setting of Luke-Acts
This study explores how the first Christians were not hidden from power—but collided with it.
If you care about biblical archaeology, Jewish roots of the Bible, historical evidence for Acts, and the world behind Jesus and the apostles, this episode is for you.
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